What is WorldWide Telescope?WWT is an application that runs inWindows that utilizes images and datastored on remote servers enabling youto explore some of the highestresolution imagery of the universeavailable in multiple wavelengths.

Take a TourWatch and see what you are missing.Choose from one of the many guidedtours within WorldWide Telescope toexplore the rich interactive environment.

Immerse yourself in a seamless beautiful environment.WorldWide Telescope (WWT) enables your computer to function as a virtual telescope, bringing together imagery from the best ground and space-based telescopes in the world. Experience narrated guided tours from astronomers and educators featuring interesting places in the sky. A web-based version of WorldWide Telescope is also now available. This version enables seamless, guided explorations of the universe from within a web browser on PC and Intel Mac OS X by using the power of Microsoft Silverlight 3.0.

WorldWide Telescope in Research and Education:American Astronomical Society Meeting, Jan, 2011The WorldWide Telescope Ambassadors Program (WWTA) and the WWT Team are hosting a hands-on workshop at AAS 217 in Seattle. This is a drop-in workshop intended to highlight the ways you can use WorldWide Telescope in your research, teaching, and public outreach efforts. We will rotate through a repeating schedule of 20 minute sessions throughout the day, offering hands-on demonstrations and instruction. See schedule details On Line Schedule - PDF Version

WorldWide Telescope Provides Detailed Mars Exploration and Enhanced Night Sky ImageNow you can use WorldWide Telescope (WWT) to explore the features of Mars as never before, thanks to the addition of more than 13,000 incredibly detailed images of Mars from various NASA spacecraft. Zoom in on the Red Planet and experience the Martian surface in unbelievably lifelike 3-D rendering, and learn more about our planetary neighbor with new interactive guided tours of Mars. And the enhancements to WWT don’t stop there. Now the WWT view of the night sky is even more amazing, with a seamless, high-resolution representation that smooths out the contours between discrete images. Gone are the visible “tiles” – those sharp edges where individual telescopic photos were combined to create the night sky panorama. This enhanced view, called the Terapixel sky image, provides an extraordinary sensation of panning the sky with the world’s most powerful telescope.